How Can We Use the Internet for FundraisingSummary:Eric Mercer prepared a comprehensive discussion of this question in October 1998. We also have a catalog of Internet services that may be useful to nonprofits. Answer:Veteran fund-raiser Tony Poderis has an essay on things to consider about fund raising online in "Fund-Raising With a Net"; see http://www.raise-funds.com/010902forum.html Thanks to Eric Mercer for making the results of his careful study available here: He points our that there are many things to consider when considering using the Internet as a development tool for a nonprofit organization. This wide-ranging essay includes many examples and live links to resource organizations, vendors, commentaries and other useful information -- http://www.nonprofits.org/npofaq/0/1511.html The ePhilanthropy Foundation has a brief anonymous questionnaire checklist on line that covers several ethical issues that come up in connection with online fundraising. See http://www.ephilanthropy.org/site/PageServer?pagename=selftest See also http://www.nonprofits.org/npofaq/0/1491.html for an extensive listing of a variety of Resources for Fundraising Online and links to several discussions of the the way these resources work. A recent book, The Nonprofit Guide to the Internet: How to Survive and Thrive, by Michael Johnston (Wiley, 2nd edition, 1999) discusses this topic among many others. You can order The Nonprofit Guide from Amazon.com using this link; a small royalty will be paid which will be used to help support this site. Mary Stewart Hall of Seattle University's Nonprofit Leadership Program (http://www.mnpl.org) summarized a research article in Fund Raising Management (Hoke Communications, 224 Seventh Street, Garden City, Long Island, NY 11530-5771. Monthly): Nonprofits that create a web site primarily to raise money should assume it may take several years before they actually recover their initial development and maintenance costs, according to a new study in the October 2001 issue of Fund Raising Management. Adrian Sargeant randomly surveyed 138 nonprofits that use a web site to communicate with stakeholders. She found 68.2% used their site to raise funds (among other purposes). The average cost of the sites designed to raise funds was $16,668 with an additional $ll,459 annually for site maintenance. While the average amount raised by such sites was $21,753 annually, the median income generated was a mere $250. Sargeant explained this discrepancy by noting that 26 nonprofits had yet to raise any money and most nonprofits were finding it took at least four years before their web-based income was more than the development and maintenance expenses. Sargeant also found, however, the nonprofits that spent the most on designing their sites were also those who secured the most web-based donations. Some 82% of sites provided a telephone number for donors to call, 69% took credit card donations and 52% provided a donation form to be mailed in with a check (some sites offered all three formats). For more information, read "Web Based Fund Raising: Is Anyone Making Any Real Money?" by Adrian Sargeant, Fund Raising Management, October 2001, pp. 20-24. Revised 9/4/99; 1/24/02, 9/12/03, 12/17/03; links updated 7/6/05, 7/10/05 -- PB
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